Hi Jan,TYPO3 is not used widely. If you take a look at their homepage their news has not been updated since January 26, 2011. That is over 6 months ago. Would you tell your clients that they should use that open source platform over Drupal, Word Press, or Joomla? TYPO3 according to compete.com only has about 2,700 uniques a month with a peek of 9k users per month. Who knows maybe it will pick up but right now it looks stale.

WordPress counts its major releases in points; 3.0 was a core version, 3.1 was a core version, 3.2 was a core version. WordPress has had 15 major releases, not 3 as the infographic erroneously asserts.

Hi Dave,sorry to say that your assumption about TYPO3 are totally wrong. See http://news.typo3.org for latest news. They are updated regularly. Last post was written on Juli 28th. If you like to see who an where TYPO3 is used, just have a look at http://vimeo.com/16458561 . It’s the keynote at the last TYPO3 conference in Frankfurt.TYPO3 is developed by a highly motivated and professional community with developers from all over the world. They backed up by a swiss not for profit association (http://association.typo3.org).Kind regards,Marcus

Hi Marcus,Thanks for the feedback I appreciate it.Looking at the traffic to the TYPO3 site it is still a very small adoption rate right now:http://siteanalytics.compete.com/typo3.org/The video you provided only gets about 6.6 plays per day. I understand it is not always about traffic but how can I recommend to a client to use this CMS if there are few developers and it could be gone tomorrow?Expression Engine a CMS that cost money gets about 7 times the traffic that TYPO3 gets. It has a thriving community so you know it will be around for a while and there are a ton of developers.There are a numerous CMS’s out there. We chose these CMS’s since they are some of the largest and most widely used. Hopefully, TYPO3 takes off and it grows so there is more competition and choices.ThanksDave

Is this the entire article? Any details on the methodology? What about 5.0 Mio visitors to the main site for wordpress? Does that include the wordpress hosted blogs, if so it is very misleading!You are really suggesting that 14.3% of the top 1 million websites are using WordPress as a platform? Does that weigh wordpress.com 143.000 times as among the 1 Mio top sites and count every blog hosted there separately? It just does not sound right, unless you can explain the methodology!Average number of tweets per day and/or the Facebook like counter? It just means their popularity correlates with users of the specific social media (or some marketing department decided that is where they focus their strategy). But how does this help ME make any decision between any of the three?

As a web developer and longtime programmer, I find Drupal to be the Swiss Army chainsaw of content management systems – the core code is nicely put together, the API is well-documented online, and the community are very helpful (though they may not necessarily go out of their way for those who can’t use search 🙂

Pretty on the eye, but barely informative to be honest.Who says which plugin is best for SEO? What does out of the box SEO mean? Is that a SEO comparison of each platform’s default theme? Where do the maintenance and setup costs come from? How is the number of followers or tweets supposed to help determine which CMS to use?

This seems like a biased post. WordPress has great features, but clearly this is pointing things out as WP is the best, Joomla is #2 and Drupal is #3. How can Joomla have anything but the easiest for installs? Installs and updates are 1 click. Moderation is just as easy in 1.7. How about Drupal? It can do some pretty powerful things, once it is set up right. Drupal and Joomla are completely separate from WP, since WP is not a CMS. I am biased, as I mostly work with Joomla. However I have worked with all 3, and if I wanted to do a fair comparison I’d point out the good and bad of each. Not knocking WP here, it is a great blogging platform.

Who doesn’t get the infographic? Tricycle, unicycle, bicycle…compares ease of use/moderation. Same with who is it for. Very intuitive. Also out of the box SEO meaning without variables / add-ons, etc etc…very clear. Thanks for the article and infographic, I am comparing and this helps quite a bit. In terms of web standards, (I.e. W3C) would the SEO rating described cover that? In terms of cleanest code and advances into HTML5 again to streamline underlying code? Lastly, open source vs private/commercial I.e. dreamweaver, besides client access, what are your thoughts?

Gentlemen and ladies, I am a novice when it comes to websites and desire to build my own starter site. I would like to point out a few things from my perspective:1. At my level, all I hear about is WordPress, Drupal and Joomla regarding opensource to consider. Therefore, this side by side visual comparison is very important to me.2. I realize that a single perspective on anything will never be perfect because the author is not all knowing/all seeing and each reader has varied knowledge sets as well. 3. Anyone using their best judgment and knowledge to provide useful information to others gets an applause from me, but I realize it comes with a bit of responsibility as well.4. I am GRATEFUL for Dave taking the TIME to publish this article – especially leaving it open for comments/feedback!!! Why? Because all of you experts out there reply with AMAZING remarks that dynamically adds GREATNESS to the final read (for me and so many others). Dave, please continue to be the spark that ignites such wonderful collaboration and content!Make It A Great Day! John.

Nice looking infographic, but lacks the “info”. I don’t see how know how many twitter followers and facebook fans a CMS has can help in the decision making. No features were mentioned, aside from “out of the box SEO”, which is vague at best.The agency I work with uses both Drupal and WordPress fairly equally, and none of us believe one is better than the other, they each have their strengths and weaknesses.I used to develop Joomla plugins, pre-1.5, and gave up with 1.5 came out and became incredibly bloated.Generally speaking, Drupal is great for large, more complex websites, with its great caching modules, whereas WordPress is great for small website and can be put together in a matter of hours, not days.

Hi Mitch,There are a few reasons I put Twitter and Facebook.1. You can see trends of how many people are using their technologies based on followers and likes.2. you can see how active a community is around each property. – I had a few other CMS’s get mad cause I didn’t include them. They had one Twitter follower and didn’t have a Facebook page. Where was their community outside of their own site?3. You can look up and see what people are saying in each community. A more active community means more support, critiques, and comments for you.I agree with you about Drupal but Word Press is getting more robust and Drupal is getting easier to use. They are on a collision course between features and usability.ThanksDave

Interesting comparison. I have tried the 3 and my favorite is Drupal because I can make .html pages with ease. In terms of making and editing pages, the three of them are ok, but I think the big weakness is making your own templates/themes on the three of them.

Great infographic. I’d love to see it updated – I suspect that WordPress had gained even more ground since WP3, and Joomla! appears to have lost the plot by not tending it’s documentation and making it web-developer friendly.It would be nice to see how each system’s support environment stacks up: # pages of documentation, # forum posts, post response time, etc. I have no doubt that WordPress will prevail, but the comparison will be interesting.

Great infographic. I’d love to see it updated – I suspect that WordPress had gained even more ground since WP3, and Joomla! appears to have lost the plot by not tending it’s documentation and making it web-developer friendly.It would be nice to see how each system’s support environment stacks up: # pages of documentation, # forum posts, post response time, etc. I have no doubt that WordPress will prevail, but the comparison will be interesting.

[…] We often get the question which CMS that we recommend for a clients online business? The answer for that is of course very different. Sometimes it´s an enterprise license solution Episerver, Sitecore or Sharepoint but most of the time it´s an open source solution like WordPress, Drupal, Joomla or Typo3. The most used open source CMS by us and other is WordPress today. If you need and more info about that you can view this great infographic from Devious Media. http://deviousmedia.com/which-open-source-backend-platform-suits-your-needs/ […]